, Washington, D.C. After serving at Old Westbury/SUNY from 1969 to 1972, Novak launched the humanities program at the Rockefeller Foundation in 1973–1974. In 1976, he accepted a tenured position at Syracuse University as University Professor and Ledden-Watson Distinguished Professor of Religion. In the fall semesters of 1987 and 1988, Novak held the W. Harold and Martha Welch chair as Professor of American Studies at the University of Notre Dame. In the spring of 1978, Novak joined the
American Enterprise Institute for Social Policy Research as a Resident Scholar, a position he held for more than a decade. He would later stay with the American Enterprise Institute as the George Frederick Jewett Chair of Religion, Philosophy, and Public Policy, and as the Institute's Director of Social and Political Studies. Novak was a frequent contributor to magazines and journals including
First Things and
National Review. In 1994, he was a signer of the document
Evangelicals and Catholics Together. On December 12, 2007, Novak declared his support for the presidential candidacy of
Republican Mitt Romney. In 2012, he authored an article entitled 'The Moral Imperative of a Free Economy' in
The 4% Solution: Unleashing the Economic Growth America Needs, published by the
George W. Bush Presidential Center. Novak was a founding board member of the
Institute on Religion and Democracy. He was also a founding member of the
Board of Trustees of
Ave Maria University and was a member of the
Ave Maria Mutual Funds Catholic Advisory Board. A portrait of Novak by
Igor Babailov hangs in the Canizaro Library on campus. In 2016 he joined the
Tim and Steph Busch School of Business and Economics of the
Catholic University of America as a distinguished visiting professor. Novak died of complications from
colon cancer February 17, 2017, in Washington, D.C., at the age of 83. He was buried alongside Karen in
Rock Creek Cemetery. ==Bibliography==